Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Karabakh Leader Wants To Join Peace Talks

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Karabakh Leader Wants To Join Peace Talks

    KARABAKH LEADER WANTS TO JOIN PEACE TALKS

    Reuters, UK
    June 6 2007

    YEREVAN, June 5 (Reuters) - Nagorno-Karabakh's separatist leader Arkady
    Gukasyan said on Tuesday the region should be involved in peace talks
    rather than waiting for Azerbaijan and Armenia to decide its fate.

    The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)
    is trying to broker a peace deal between Azerbaijan and Armenia to
    cement a 1994 ceasefire to end a war over Karabakh, in which more
    than 35,000 people were killed.

    Karabakh, an enclave in Azeri territory, is almost entirely populated
    by ethnic Armenians since many of the ethnic Azeri minority were
    driven out in the fighting in the early 1990s.

    The presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan are due to meet on Saturday to
    discuss the situation in and round Karabakh whose 140,000 inhabitants
    have voted in favour of independence. It is not internationally
    recognised as a country.

    The region is represented by Armenia in the peace talks and Gukasyan
    said that while they did not see eye-to-eye on everything, he felt
    Karabakh's wishes -- particularly for self-determination -- were
    being heard.

    "Karabakh will never agree to be part of Azerbaijan. We will not give
    up our freedom. If there is no agreement on status, everything else
    is out," Gukasyan said after meeting the OSCE.

    "Keeping discussions between Armenia and Azerbaijan is destructive,"
    he told reporters in the Armenian capital Yerevan.

    "We are talking about the destiny of Karabakh and I don't see any
    reason for us not to be in the negotiations. Karabakh should have
    the final word."

    The OSCE hopes Armenia and Azerbaijan will leave aside the thorny
    issue of who rules Karabakh and instead agree practical steps to
    return Azeri refugees to districts round Karabakh, secure a corridor
    between the enclave and Armenia, and allow international peacekeepers
    to monitor the moves.

    Despite wanting a seat at the negotiating table, Gukasyan said he was
    ready to see if Armenia and Azerbaijan came up with a deal acceptable
    to Karabakh.

    "Let's let the negotiations finish first and then we'll assess the
    situation," he said.

    "Unfortunately I don't see a resolution. Karabakh will have to get
    involved sooner or later, if they want to solve specific issues."
Working...
X